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To: geode00 who wrote (125928)2/1/2008 1:04:44 PM
From: Patricia Trinchero  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 362920
 
And most Americans blame the Saudis for oil prices..............We need only look at points within our borders to see the true benefactors of high oil prices.



To: geode00 who wrote (125928)2/1/2008 4:02:19 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 362920
 
Obama receives endorsement of over 80 newspapers

my.barackobama.com

By Feb 5 State Update - Feb 1st, 2008 at 3:04 pm EST

To date, Barack Obama has received over 80 endorsements from newspapers in early states and states with February 5 primaries around the country.

Below are a few excerpts, followed by a list of the endorsements with links to the full articles.

Chicago Tribune: "Barack Obama is the rare individual who can sit in the U.S. Senate yet have his career potential unfulfilled. He is the Democrat best suited to lead this nation. We offer him our endorsement for the Feb. 5 Illinois primary."

Arizona Republic: "We believe Barack Obama has the best chance of moving Washington and the nation beyond the poisonous partisanship of recent decades. He appeals to independent voters and Republicans, in addition to members of his own party. His promise to unite is convincing."

St. Louis Post-Dispatch: "Barack Obama is aware of yesterday, but he is about today and tomorrow and next year. In a strong field of Democratic presidential contenders, he offers the best hope of transforming the debate and moving on to what America can be in the 21st century."

San Francisco Chronicle: "In a Jan. 17 meeting with our editorial board, Obama demonstrated an impressive command of a wide variety of issues. He listened intently to the questions. He responded with substance. He did not control a format without a stopwatch on answers or constraints on follow-up questions, yet he flourished in it. He radiated the sense of possibility that has attracted the votes of independents and tapped into the idealism of young people during this campaign. He exuded the aura of a 46-year-old leader who could once again persuade the best and the brightest to forestall or pause their grand professional goals to serve in his administration."

Newspapers that have endorsed Barack Obama:

AL – Tuscaloosa News

AZ – The Arizona Republic

CA – Black Voice News

CA – Chico News & Review

CA – Fresno Bee

CA – Inland Valley Daily Bulletin

CA – Long Beach Leader

CA – Los Angeles Daily News

CA – Los Angeles Sentinel

CA – Los Angeles Wave

CA – Marin Pacific Sun

CA – Modesto Bee

CA – North Bay Bohemian

CA – North Coast Journal

CA – Palm Springs Desert Sun

CA – Pasadena Star-News/San Gabriel Valley Tribune/Whittier Daily News

CA – Precinct Reporter

CA – Riverside Press-Enterprise

CA – Sacramento Bee

CA – San Diego City Beat

CA – San Francisco Bay Guardian

CA – San Francisco Bay View

CA – San Francisco Chronicle

CA – San Jose Mercury News

CA – Santa Barbara Independent

CA – Santa Cruz Sentinel

CA – Tri County Bulletin

CA – Stockton Record

CO – Aspen Times

CO – Colorado Springs Independent

CT – Connecticut Post

CT – Norwich Bulletin

CT – The Day

CT – Yale Daily News

FL – Gainesville Sun

FL – Palm Beach Post

FL – Tampa Tribune

FL – St. Petersburg Times

GA – Atlanta Journal Constitution

GA – Atlanta Daily World

IA – Ames Iowa State Daily

IA – Des Moines El Latino

IA – Iowa City Press Citizen

IA – Iowa City Daily Iowan

IA – Sioux City Journal

IA – Logan Herald-Observer

IA – Ottumwa Courier

IL – Chicago Defender

IL – Chicago Sun-Times

IL – Chicago Tribune

IL – Daily Herald

IL – Belleville News Democrat

MA – Bay State Banner

MA – Boston Globe

MA – Boston Phoenix

MA – Daily News Tribune

MA – The Springfield Republican

ME – Portland Press Herald

MN – Minnesota Daily

MO – Kansas City Call

MO – St. Louis Post-Dispatch

NH – Littleton Courier

NH – Nashua Telegraph

NH – Portsmouth Herald

NH – Valley News

NJ – The Trenton Times

NV – Elko Daily Free Press

NV – Las Vegas Review Journal

NV – Reno Gazette Journal

NY – Daily Star

NY – Gay City News

NY – New York Observer

NY – New York Post

NM – Santa Fe New Mexican

NM – Santa Fe Reporter

PA – Philadelphia Inquirer

SC – The State

SC – The Rock Hill Herald

SC – The Greenville News

TN – Tri-State Defender

TX – Dallas Morning News

WA – The Seattle Times



To: geode00 who wrote (125928)2/1/2008 4:13:34 PM
From: Ron  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 362920
 
Looks like the Bush-Cheney energy policy is working...

Exxon Mobil delivered its strongest performance ever last year, earning a record $40.6 billion in net income because of surging oil prices, the company said Friday.

The figure, a 3 percent increase from the previous year, exceeded the company’s own record for profits at an American corporation, set in 2006, and is nearly twice what it earned in 2003.



To: geode00 who wrote (125928)2/1/2008 5:46:09 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 362920
 
Obamania in action

latimes.com

His good judgment and experience are winning over party stalwarts.

By Rosa Brooks
Columnist
The Los Angeles Times
January 31, 2008

Is endorsing Barack Obama the new cool? Not long ago, Hillary Rodham Clinton was the seemingly inevitable front-runner for the Democratic Party's presidential nomination. Obama was the insurgent. He was pulling in young voters, independents and new voters, but he lacked the blessing of the party's heavyweights.

That's changed. Obama's success in moving beyond the traditional party base -- combined with serious Clinton fatigue -- is leading many seasoned Democratic leaders to rethink their earlier assumptions. John Kerry, Patrick Leahy, Claire McCaskill and Tom Daschle, among others, have lined up behind Obama, and the last few days brought Obama a surge of new, high-profile endorsements from such luminaries as Ted Kennedy and Nobel laureate Toni Morrison.

His endorsers are right to see Obama as their party's best hope for 2008. Though skeptics contend that Obama lacks "experience," this concern makes sense only if you think you have to be a Washington insider to be qualified to run for president. Obama began his career as a community organizer and civil rights attorney in Chicago -- relevant background for someone who will have to deal with tough economic and social justice issues as president. He was elected to the Illinois Senate in 1996 and the U.S. Senate in 2004; in all, he's spent 11 years being directly accountable to voters (that's four more than Clinton).

Is that "enough" experience? Remember that if you never develop good judgment, racking up "experience" just tends to make you older, not necessarily smarter. Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld were "experienced," and they brought us the Iraq war. Clinton, who's billing herself as the "experienced" candidate, voted for that war.

Meanwhile, Obama, as a D.C. outsider, said in 2002 that a war in Iraq would be "a dumb war. ... A war based not on principle but on politics." He predicted, accurately, that the Iraq war would distract the U.S. from domestic priorities (such as the economy) and from our more pressing national security priorities (going after Al Qaeda, nuclear nonproliferation, forging a better energy policy).

Obama has good judgment, which trumps mere experience every time. On Iran, he called for engagement and a toning down of bellicose rhetoric. Clinton was instead fanning the flames by voting for an amendment favored by the Bush administration that called the Iranian Revolutionary Guard a terrorist organization. Obama's judgment was vindicated when the National Intelligence Estimate asserted that Iran had already stopped its nuclear weapons program. On Pakistan, Obama consistently raised questions about the unqualified U.S. support for Pervez Musharraf -- and was vindicated again as it became increasingly clear that Musharraf was neither a democrat nor a reliable U.S. ally against extremism.

Obama has solid legislative accomplishments under his belt too. In the sink-or-swim Illinois statehouse, he brokered compromises on politically sensitive issues such as children's health coverage, racial profiling and tax credits for the working poor. In the U.S. Senate, Obama sponsored ethics reform legislation, legislation to ensure accountability of private military contractors and -- with Republican Sen. Richard Lugar -- a successful bill on securing global stocks of conventional weapons. That wasn't glamorous, but it was important. Conventional weapons, not WMD, kill U.S. troops in Afghanistan and Iraq.

Equally important, Obama's background and message are enabling him to reach beyond any narrow demographic slice of the electorate, and this bodes well -- both for his ability to beat a GOP rival and for his ability to lead effectively and without divisiveness once elected. Obama's high-powered endorsers also may have noticed something the mainstream media seem largely to have missed: If you add up the delegates won in Iowa, New Hampshire, Nevada and South Carolina, Obama's ahead, so far, with 63 delegates to Clinton's 48.

True, Clinton still has more super delegates -- those are the Democratic Party elites who each get a vote at the August convention and are not bound by the votes in their respective states -- but that's a vestige of her former status as the "inevitable" establishment candidate. Most of those super delegates came out for Clinton months before the primaries and caucuses began, and they're a notoriously fickle lot. With Edwards out, it's down to Obama and Clinton. And if Obama continues to win real delegates in real primaries, many of the super delegates in Clinton's column may instead join Kennedy in endorsing Obama.

There's been such a rush to endorse Obama that I'm starting to feel a bit left out. Admittedly, I'm not a senator or a Nobel laureate, but ... I'm starting to think I should endorse him myself. Why should Ted Kennedy get to have all the fun?